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Enabling Large Scale Wireless Broadband: The Case for TAPs Roger Karrer, Ashu Sabharwal and Ed Knightly ECE Department Rice University Joint project with.

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Presentation on theme: "Enabling Large Scale Wireless Broadband: The Case for TAPs Roger Karrer, Ashu Sabharwal and Ed Knightly ECE Department Rice University Joint project with."— Presentation transcript:

1 Enabling Large Scale Wireless Broadband: The Case for TAPs Roger Karrer, Ashu Sabharwal and Ed Knightly ECE Department Rice University Joint project with B. Aazhang, D. Johnson and J. P. Frantz

2 Ashu Sabharwal The Killer App is the Service l High bandwidth l High availability –Large-scale deployment –High reliability –Nomadicity l Economic viability l Why? –Broadband to the home and public places –Enable new applications

3 Ashu Sabharwal WiFi Hot Spots? l Why? poor economics –High costs of wired infrastructure ($10k + $500/month) –Pricing: U.S. $3 for 15 minutes –Dismal coverage averaging 0.6 km 2 per 50 metro areas projected by 2005 l 11 Mb/sec, free spectrum, inexpensive APs/NICs Carrier’s Backbone/Internet T1 Medium bandwidth (wire), sparse, and expensive

4 Ashu Sabharwal 3G/Cellular? l Cellular towers are indeed ubiquitous –Coverage, mobility, … l High bandwidth is elusive –Aggregate bandwidths in Mb/sec range, per-user bandwidths in 100s Kbs/s –Expensive: spectral fees and high infrastructure costs High availability, but slow and expensive

5 Ashu Sabharwal Ad Hoc Networks? l Availability –Problems: intermediate nodes can move, power off, routes break, packets are dropped, TCP collapses, … l Low bandwidth –Poor capacity scaling “Free” but low availability and low bandwidth

6 Ashu Sabharwal TAPs: Multihop Wireless Infrastructure l Transit Access Points (TAPs) are APs with –beam forming antennas –multiple air interfaces –enhanced MAC/scheduling/routing protocols l Form wireless backbone with limited wired gateways

7 Ashu Sabharwal Multihop Wireless Infrastructure l Transit Access Points (TAPs) are APs with –beam forming antennas –multiple air interfaces –enhanced MAC/scheduling/routing protocols l Form wireless backbone with limited wired gateways l High bandwidth –High spatial reuse –Capacity scaling from multiple antennas l High availability –Non- mobile infrastructure –Redundant paths l Good economics –Unlicensed spectrum, few wires, exploit WiFi components –Deployable on demand

8 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 1a: Multi-Destination Routing l Most data sources or sinks at a wire l The wireless backbone is multi-hop l Routing protocols for any wire abstraction l Two distinct time-scales –MU-MU, MU-TAP channels : fast variations –TAP-TAP channels : slow variations

9 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 1b: Multi-Destination Scheduling l Scheduling –At what time-scales, routes are chosen ? –At fast time scales, which path is best now (channels, contention, …) ? –Fast time-scale information hard to propagate l Protocols should be –Decentralized –Opportunistic

10 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 2: Distributed Traffic Control l Distributed resource management: how to throttle flows to their system-wide fair rate? –TCP cannot achieve it (too slow) –Throttle traffic “near-the-wire” to ensure fairness and high spatial reuse –Incorporate channel conditions as well as traffic demands

11 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 3: Distributed Medium Access l Challenges –Traffic and system dynamics preclude scheduled cycles –Others’ channel states, priority, & backlog unknown –Multiple air interfaces l Opportunism due to channel variations l Modulate aggressiveness according to overheard information

12 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 4: TAP-TAP Physical Layer l TAPs carry traffic from many TAPs l Data rates much higher than TAP-MU l Use MIMO, with target spectral efficiencies ~ 20+ bits/s/Hz –802.11g ~2.5 bits/s/Hz  8X faster –802.11b ~0.5 bits/s/Hz  40X faster

13 Ashu Sabharwal TAP-TAP PHY Architecture l Spatial diversity: 4-6 antennas at each TAP. l More power : FCC limit 1 Watt (802.11x uses 100mW) l Very high throughputs possible –Upto 440 Mb/s in one 802.11 channel –Large range for rates 50-150 Mb/s l Major challenges –None of current codes/modulations suffice –Low-power low-cost hardware architectures

14 Ashu Sabharwal Challenge 5: Capacity Achieving Protocol Design l Traditional view of network capacity assumes zero protocol overhead (no routing overhead, contention, PHY training etc.) l Protocols themselves require capacity l A new holistic system view: “the network is the channel” –Incorporate overhead in discovering/measuring the resource –Explore capacity limits under real-world protocols –Shows PHY overhead no different from protocol overhead

15 Ashu Sabharwal Prototype and Testbed Deployment l FPGA implementation of enhanced opportunistic, beamforming, multi-channel, QoS MAC l Build prototypes and deploy on Rice campus and nearby neighborhoods l Measurement study from channel conditions to traffic patterns

16 Ashu Sabharwal Summary l Transit Access Points –WiFi “footprint” is dismal –3G too slow and too expensive –Removing wires is the key for economic viability l Challenges –Multi-hop wireless architectures –Distributed control –Scalable protocols –High speed PHY


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